The Pun in Wallace Stevens’ Poetry

Abstract: The American Modernist poet Wallace Stevens offers the “supreme fiction” as a substitute for religion. This “supreme fiction” is a secular poem based on the interdependence of reality and the imagination. Throughout his poetry, Stevens makes use of a lot of   puns to explain the natu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Farid BENMEZAL
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: CRAC, INSAAC 2025-03-01
Series:Akofena
Online Access:https://www.revueakofena.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/21-M15v03-11-Farid-BENMEZAL_243-250.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Abstract: The American Modernist poet Wallace Stevens offers the “supreme fiction” as a substitute for religion. This “supreme fiction” is a secular poem based on the interdependence of reality and the imagination. Throughout his poetry, Stevens makes use of a lot of   puns to explain the nature of the “supreme fiction” and the conditions for its credibility. Accordingly,  some puns  are employed with the purpose of  refuting romanticism, classical mythology and Christianity that rest mainly on non-natural foundations while other puns are aimed at showing how limited the rationalist thought that overestemates reason and belittles the imagination. Stevens also  resorts to puns in order to explain his “supreme fiction” as a humanistic project that protects man from the pressure of reality. Through close reading, this article examines the different implications of the use of puns and reaches the conclusion that puns formed from words with secular connotations serve as a good device to suggest poetry as the replacement of traditional religions as life’s redemption in modern era. By replacing religious words, the puns also contribute to make Stevens’ poetry highly secular. Keywords: imagination, pun, reality, secularity, Wallace Stevens
ISSN:2706-6312
2708-0633